Understanding The Marketplace and Customer Needs: Consumers Market When They
Understanding The Marketplace and Customer Needs: Consumers Market When They
Understanding The Marketplace and Customer Needs: Consumers Market When They
1. Production concept
2. Product concept
3. Selling concept
4. Marketing concept
5. Societal Marketing concept
Designing a Customer Value-Driven Marketing Strategy
(cont.):
Societal marketing:
The company’s marketing decisions should consider consumers’
wants, the company’s requirements, consumers’ long-run interests,
and society’s long-run interests.
4. Company-Wide Strategic Planning:
*When designing a business portfolio, it’s a good idea to add and support products
and businesses that fit closely with the firm’s core philosophy and competencies.
*The purpose of strategic planning is to find ways in which the company can best use
its strengths to take advantage of attractive opportunities in the environment.
*For this reason, most standard portfolio analysis methods evaluate SBUs on two
important dimensions: the attractiveness of the SBU’s market or industry and the
strength of the SBU’s position in that market or industry.
Marketing environment: includes the actors and forces outside marketing that affect
marketing management’s ability to build and maintain successful relationships with
target customers.
Microenvironment: consists of the actors close to the company that affect its ability to
serve its customers—the company, suppliers, marketing intermediaries, customer
markets, competitors, and publics.
Demographic Environment:
• Demography: is the study of human populations—size, density, location, age,
gender, race, occupation, and other statistics.
• Demographic environment: involves people, and people make up markets.
• Demographic trends: include changing age and family structures, geographic
population shifts, educational characteristics, and population diversity.
Baby Boomers – born 1946 to 1964
Generation X – born between 1965 and 1976
Millennials – born between 1977 and 2000
Generation Z – born after 2000
Generational marketing: is important in segmenting people by lifestyle or life stage
instead of age.
Demographic Environment:
• Changing American family.
• Changes in the workforce.
Markets are becoming more diverse:
• International
• National
• Ethnicity
• Gay and lesbian
• Disabled